Tuesday 28 July 2015

THE ADLER HERESY

Unlike the titles of so many of my blog posts and articles, this one holds no obscure esoteric subtext to entertain or task the reader.

The opinions I will express below, will appear, to many, to be nothing short of a betrayal of those I have formerly sought to defend; an expression of heresies worthy of a bonfire in the Campo de' Fiori.

What follows is not a betrayal, of course. Rather, it is an attempt to look beyond our anger and disappointment at the looming prospect of being denied a new toy, with a view to exploring how the whole sorry affair might have been managed with some strategic foresight, returning real benefits to the shooters’ cause.

There is much I could say about the Adler controversy, but will not. I will not because, frankly, I am both amazed and very grateful the Australian media’s collective mind is not as devious as my own. If it were, if the media focused on the various emotive angles that have occurred to me, there would be absolutely no way the Adler’s action would ever glint under the Australian sun.

It is as much for the reasons I will not outline here, that I believe we would have been better served as an interest group, to have taken an altogether different and thus far largely unexplored strategic approach, to the Adler’s importation.

And now, prologue complete, I’ll will get on with the sombre business of detailing my radical views. Which, just quietly, I suspect I do not hold in isolation.

The Adler a110 lever action
In the current Australian political climate, to have marketed a gun as “a game-changer”, as seen on at least one firearms merchant's site,  was something of a game-changer in itself, having pretty-much redefined the human capacity for cloth-eared stupidity. 

How we can promote a gun as a “game-changer” while simultaneously attempting to convince the media to swallow the claim that it’s no different to any other gun, absolutely eludes me. 

And as we now know, it also eluded the media.

As if that weren’t ill-conceived marketing decision enough, Adler promoters have decided to throttle even more catch-phrases out of their certifiably insane muse, among them the claim that it is “Tailor made for fast and furious pig shooting from the bike, quad or ATV".

In the parlance of the great majority of Australians, this description translates as follows, “You can pump much more lead into the air than ever before, while engaging in gang-related drive-by shootings!” Or perhaps, “Why not hang off the back of the ute with your red-neck mates while letting rip with this little beauty!”

Exactly how many units of product the importer expected to move in the 10 seconds prior to the media swooping on these claims, investigating them and setting new standards of sensationalism, remains unclear, but one presumes the importer is wishing the retailer had tried more subtle sales-pitches.

There should never have been any doubt that journalists, anti-gunners, politicians, or for that matter the community, would vehemently oppose the introduction of any technology that promoted itself on claims of increased speed, capacity and potency.

The arrogant folly of taking a wild punt that the Adler would slip into the system without raising a regulatory eyebrow has resulted not only in doubt being cast over the future availability of the Adler, but also a potential for tighter restrictions or perhaps even the abolition of lever-actions already in the community.

So how do I believe we should have approached the importation of the Adler?


Here is where you should start collecting wood for that bonfire I mentioned at the outset, because I believe that as an interest group, shooters, via their various agencies, should have moved pro-actively to recommend the Adler be assigned the tightest possible licensing category, if not banned entirely for recreational purposes.

Despite the hype, the Adler is not a “game-changer”.  There is no evidence to indicate that it is more accurate than shotguns currently available and both hunters and target shooters are doing very well in their chosen activities without the benefit of Adler’s boasted speed and 8-shot capacity.

If a hunter feels he’s likely to be bailed-up by 8 homicidal porkers, there are plenty of other efficient calibres with adequate magazine capacities that have served the hunter to date. Despite the marketing spin, most pig hunters do not use shotguns and I suspect the number of duck and skeet shooters who feel the Adler’s fast 8 shot capacity will improve their game in real terms.

Let’s be upfront. We want the Adler because it’s cool and we are angry about the controversy surrounding it because we want one of these cool new toys. 

If denied access to the Adler, Australian shooters will not be disadvantaged in any way, whatsoever. We are simply expressing indignation at the State’s suggestion we cannot be trusted and we are angered by what some perceive as a further erosion of our ‘rights’.

Hollywood has already ensured the thug-appeal of the shotgun and as much as we may resent the stereotypes and being nannied by the State, only an invertebrate intellect could genuinely believe the lever-action would not swiftly become the weapon of choice among underworld figures and gang member. 

This was bound to fill police ranks with concern about being outgunned and as we know, it was police who raised initial concerns.

The Alder has brought much angst and unwanted scrutiny to firearms regulation and the lever-action in particular, at a time when Howard’s mini-me is at the Nation’s helm, but we needed only to show a little maturity to harness the inevitable public outcry to our advantage.

The moment the Adler promotions surfaced, we should have been capable of seeing the inevitable looming large on the horizon and resolved to lead the push to reject the Adler.

Yes, that’s right, reject it!

In so doing we would have lost nothing tangible or demonstrably beneficial to shooters and hunters. However, we would have demonstrated very clearly that the anti-gunners’ portrayal of shooters as fanatical rednecks, who lack any responsibility for considerations of public safety, self-control and moderation, is demonstrably false.

By leading the push for moderation in a very public way, we’d have made a clear statement, “we are not committed to owning firearms at any cost.”

We’d have put on the record, our willingness to work cooperatively with agencies such as the police, for the public good, rather than proving ourselves committed to domestic heavy arms proliferation, as the Greens and others will portray us.

We’d have demonstrated our maturity, our foresight and our commitment to working in partnership with agencies and the community, to ensure responsible firearms ownership, instead of simply talking about it.

By making one well publicised ‘sacrifice’ we’d have stripped our opponents of their main weapon against us, the perception that we will never be satisfied and that no-matter how outrageous the proposition, we will always strive to justify ownership of any and all firearms.

The greatest hurdle we face in the battle to keep our firearms and retain our shooting and hunting cultures, is the public’s perception of who we are and what we’re about. Had we adopted the strategy above, we’ve have done immeasurable damage to the stereotypes promulgated by our opponents.

More importantly, we’d have been well placed for future lobbying on other issues of genuine significance, because we’d have proved ourselves capable of objective analytical thought and decision making, that, in the public’s eyes, would have shown us to be responsible participants in the policy making process.

Instead, we continue our attempts to defend the Adler, with half-baked claims about its benefits to the control of the feral menace and even on the grounds of ‘humaneness’, which absolutely no-one, including a great many hunters and shooters, is swallowing.

And now our lack of strategic foresight and restraint, coupled with flawed perceptions of what we wrongly persist in calling our “rights as firearms owners”, seem set to jeopardise our relatively easy access to other lever-action calibres.

If we hope to retain our firearms into the future, our advocates need to get much better at this strategic planning and risk management lark!


So send hither thy Dominicans, I fear them not. For I'll get outaya way now...


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22 comments:

  1. Bloody perfect... ... I couldn't have written a truer article...

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  2. an extremely well written piece and so damn accurate. This exactly what should have been writted / done at the very start.

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  3. as much as I hate to admit your right your right. If its clear we are going to get a lot of bad press and we cant win we can try to get something positive out of it. This is going to end badly for lever action rifles for a few shots noone needs.

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    1. Peter Raffaelli29 July 2015 at 08:54

      Ben, the number of shots is irrelevant.
      We as shooters need to stop being on the back foot with every issue that comes down the pike and start pushing back, together, for a change.

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    2. Is the number of shots irrelevant to the controversy? I'd have thought the opposite. Surely it was, at the very least, ill-conceived to be attempting to introduce a shotgun that breaches legislation in NSW, at a time when shotguns are under the microscope as a result of public outcry over the Monis episode? I'd have thought, at the very least, it would have been more clever to try to flog them a year from now and with a uniformly permissible magazine capacity, which, unless I'm wrong (?) is a maximum of 5 in NSW.

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  4. No this is wrong, We don't blame an importer for marketing as he is allowed a legal product. We don't agree to anything the government wants. If you want to stick to the idea of what we have now you go right ahead but I am sick of this shit, we have had statistics and research showing that the NFA has done jack all for crime rates for years now and its time shooters took to teh streets to demand we are treated with bloody respect again or need i point out the Freak comments the other day

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    1. In my view and from a strategic risk management perspective, a rally is arguably the worst thing we could do. 1) they are always poorly attended, 2) they are always conducted in the city, usually Sydney, to ensure maximum impact and turn-out, by both shooters and the media. So, in the middle of the greatest concentration of people who do not shoot and fear guns, people who believe all shooters are thugs and rednecks, we manage to get thousands of people together wearing cammo and T-shirts saying, "I Love Piggin'" and "I Love Guns" and "GreenTards are Fuckwits", “From My Cold Dead Hand” etc, just so the media can film them all and portray us as irresponsible rednecks.

      And what will it achieve to give the media a field day? We'll certainly get to show everyone that the people in cammo who own all the guns in the community, are very very angry people and I'm sure that'll induce the vast majority of the public to do a turnabout and demand the angry people get access to more guns. NOT!

      Even those who organised the rallies of the late 90s agree that rallies today are a very bad idea and it's time to get smart rather than come across as angry and threatening in the midst of high-heels and himpster heaven.

      The arrogant sense of right and entitlement, coupled with the contempt our sector shows for rational strategic planning in the longer term, is what has screwed us over consistently to date. Those who take it upon themselves to organise rallies today are simply feeding stereotypes and making fodder for the media, thus doing us all a very great disservice.

      Now if you could get tens of thousands to turn up wearing the uniforms of their trade, i.e. Barristers in Silk, doctors and nurses in scrubs, priests in collars, Ambos and Firies in uniform, business people is suits and so on, and if the angry faces could be left at home, it might send the message that shooters come from all walks of life, many of them the most responsible positions in society. But you cannot control what people wear or how they will behave, and because we ourselves tend to shrink away from being identified as firearms owners when in our professional gear, we will default to cammo, caps and T-shirts that are not so much clever as just plain crass.

      Rallies are simply places to make nails for coffins.

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  5. stephen.gear@bigpond.com29 July 2015 at 07:38

    You are totally right. I had been thinking during the past few days that the pro- gun side were actually giving the anti's ammunition. Some of the reasons given for having an 8 shot firearm were definitely inflammatory. So now, are we in for more drastic changes to the firearms laws? Am I going to lose my 30/30?.

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  6. This will get some disapproving 'clucks' Garry!

    However, I want to take issue with this comment, " ...we would have demonstrated very clearly that the anti-gunners’ portrayal of shooters as fanatical rednecks, who lack any responsibility for considerations of public safety, self-control and moderation, is demonstrably false."

    We take responsibility for and consider public safety by the way we store and handle firearms. Very few, if any, shootings are a result of poor firearms handling practices and very few firearms enter the hands of criminal from the firearm owning community. Saying that we should jettison the Adler is possibly "losing a battle to win a war" but if you look at where we are, people are sick of being reasonable and pragmatic, giving ground and never gaining it back if not losing further. Maybe it is time to just stand our ground?

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  7. Peter Raffaelli29 July 2015 at 08:25

    The marketing of this firearm started badly and cast the die for this, no doubt.
    However, while I usually love reading your posts I have to disagree wholeheartedly with this completely.

    While I agree that this whole issue has further set back the shooting community, there is no reason whatsoever for banning this lever gun as it poses no more threat to the Australian public than any other, or to go further out on a limb, any pump or semi either.

    We should not be participating in the continued push for our death by a thousand cuts, however please do not misunderstand this as we are now between a rock and a hard place, the line must be drawn in the sand at some point.

    If not, where does this stop?

    The next time some marketing moron stuffs up, do we then move to ban bolt actions, single shots or whatever else to placate the mewling dogs that are the anti gun crowd and the Police with their indoctrinated "no guns for citizens" stance?

    No, granted, we are in the mire right now and nothing forward of this will be good, but it is time that ALL shooters unite with one voice and say "ENOUGH !"

    The days to come will be interesting indeed.

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  8. I tend to agree the marketing could have been done smarter, however, is the loss of this firearm as a category A not of genuine significance? Will it become genuine significance if it applies to lever/pump action rifles? Currently also, there are other lever action shotguns allowed in to the country.

    It is not about want/need, but what is in the current draconian firearms law and the fact that it allows the Adler to be imported. All the reasonable checks and balances were in place, yet due to media hysteria and scaremongering, we are now facing a knee-jerk reaction.

    I am dismayed that you do not believe this is of genuine significance. If this gets through, then what would be next to go? I never had an Adler on order, and probably wouldn't get one if they were legal after all of this, but this is all about principal...about politicians wanting to be seen to be doing something by the majority of the public who have no exposure to firearms and buy-in to the hype.

    Greatly written article, I just don't agree with your sentiments that we would be better placed for future issues of genuine significance. If we roll over easy on this one, where would it end???

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  9. Justin Ferguson29 July 2015 at 08:37

    An interesting point of view. I can't say I agree with it,but I can see how you've gotten there.
    Rejecting the Adler will not win any points with the anti's or the government,as the blatant use of this firearm as a scapegoat to go after ALL calibres of lever and pump-action firearms shows. They don't really care about the Adler,they care about every gun we currently have access to,and they want them all to go away.

    While the marketing of the Adler was not the smartest given the general public and police & government perception of firearms,there was nothing illegal about it.
    The firearm complies with cat-a requirements,as do the many other lever action shotguns already on the market that have been here for many years largely un-noticed by the wowsers. If the Adler actually was 'subverting' the rules as has been suggested in the media you could pan it,but it isn't. Not every shooter needs one,and guess what? Not every shooter will want to buy one either. To suggest that because there is no pressing need for it,so it should be rejected for fear of upsetting the government is a, frankly,cowardly suggestion,and I wonder where you would draw the line at not wanting to offend anyone in future. Do you drive a hybrid Prius C instead of an HSV Commodore because both get the job done (in the most basic sense anyway),but one is less intimidating to irrationally scared people?
    To date,no-one has used a lever action in any calibre in a crime in this country that I have been able to find,so where is the actual problem? If they're not being used by criminals,and can be used by licenced people safely,why roll over on it?

    Don't forget that our friends across the ditch enjoy far more freedom in relation to firearms than we do. Are you going to suggest next that New Zealand is a vastly different nation to Australia and that they can be trusted to own firearms that we cannot?
    Firearm ownership in this country was never about need for anyone but primary producers,it's a hobby and a sport,that many hundreds of thousands of Australians enjoy.
    If all you are concerned about is approving the guns we need to have,you may as well turn them all in now unless you live on a major property. If you ask the general public,noone needs to hunt,noone needs to target shoot,so why have guns at all? But don't voice that opinion too loudly or that's exactly what will happen next...unless we can stand together and fight it.

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  10. Thanks to everyone for their feedback. I'll try to respond to some of your concerns in bulk, as it were.

    First, what I have suggested is not appeasement of the antis. That would be futile. I am suggesting the opposite in fact, to undermine one of their strongest claims against us i.e that we would demand the right to own a lever-action Howitzer if such a beast were available.

    My stratagem is directed at the public, who are not the antis. Most members of the public don't give a toss about guns until the media forces them to. Keep the voter onside with demonstrations of actions they will consider signs of responsible firearms ownership and they will continue to believe the views of the media and the antis is just hype.

    Yet it is the public’s response to media hype that governments seek to capitalise on in the form of scalping some votes. Seems to me our efforts should be spent less on opposing the antis and more on proving to the public the antis’ claims about our attitudes are wrong.

    Someone asked if I didn't think storing guns safely amounted to just such a gesture. No, I do not. Until 96 guns were kept on walls, under beds and in wardrobes. The requirement to store guns in safes etc is imposed on us by govt, we didn't volunteer to do it.

    Our rights re not being eroded by the antis. Australians do not enjoy firearms ownership as a 'right' as they do in the US. We enjoy access to guns on a licensed precedential basis. That is to say, we have always had them, which sets something of a precedent, so we may continue to have them at the governments discretion. We can be stripped of this at any time and may yet find that's the case, unless we start to play the game smarter.

    I understand people’s desire to stand firm on a principle. Where has that got us to date? How has that strategy advanced our cause one iota since 96 and how do people think it will advance our cause in the future? Seems to be standing on principle is an empty gesture if it doesn’t serve us in any practical sense.

    I do not believe the Adler is evil. Were it available I’d not buy it because it’s not my thing, but if someone handed me one for Christmas I’d say thankyou very much, way cool! But I do not believe the Adler will ever be available as a general purpose firearm, in which case it will not be a major seller, making it the ideal subject for a gesture of goodwill aimed at improving perceptions of who we are, thus advancing our cause.

    As I indicated in the article, there are aspects of the Adler and indeed all similar arms, that the media has not yet cottoned onto and I will not outline them in a public forum such as this for fear I’ll be the catalyst for that realisation, which is very frustrating I can tell you. But I suspect even the thicky metrocentric media will work it out eventually, at which time we will face absolute prohibition of certain firearms. We could have avoided this, perhaps, had we responded to this latest controversy a little more strategically.

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  11. Very well written!
    One may disagree with the idea that this sacrifice may win any political points and instead will pave the road into the further tightening of the gun laws, say, banning the lever action and pump rifles would be an obvious step to be put on a table by the "progressives" and another sacrifice of a tiny portion of our rights and freedoms will become an agenda of the next election cycle.
    Still, this article illustrates very well what a bloody poisonous political atmosphere we all live in, when all these sacrifices seem absolutely inevitable.

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    1. Again, Savelij, I am not suggesting my stratagem will win political points. I have no desire to see us do that, whatsoever. But what we need is a change of public perception about who we are. Politicians are cynical creatures. They do not make legislation for the public good. With the odd rare exception, they make it for the votes it promises. For too long all our advocacy has been a) responsive and b) aimed at trying to convince the ant-minded that our perspective is correct. It has been proven time and again, that this tack is folly. What we need to do is strive to ensure than the vast majority of the average punters in the street who don’t really care one way or another about gun control, CONTINUE not to care one way or another about gun control. Standing on our soap boxes crapping on about rights we don’t actually have and defending even the indefensible, does not accomplish this. It simply makes us look like the unrestrained rednecks the media portrays us as.

      Finally, and I think quite interestingly, despite having eluded to the fact I have thought of some aspects of the current debate that could undo us in a big way....so much so I am unwilling to share them publicly for fear of setting something in motion, not a single stakeholder or advocate has inquired privately, as to what those issues might be. This, in my view, demonstrates a level of arrogant presumption that no one could possibly think of something relevant that they have not, that is symptomatic of the contempt our agencies harbour for strategic planning and risk management.

      Thanks for your feedback.

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    2. The only way we will change the attitude of the public is for everyone to get as many people they know involved in shooting, even if its just taking then to the range once. I have converted a number of friend I know by taking them for a shot at the local range or out for a hunt so they can see that shooting is a safe and well regulated sport and that many shooters are like any other average Australia, just our chosen sport or past time involves firearms!!!

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  12. Well Garry, I see your point. However, Australia already have semi autos and pump action firearms. Should they be banned totally just in case a crim wants to steal one? Crims are opportunistic parasites and they would probably thieve a single shot .22 if it was left lying around. Opportunity, that's what we give when we advertise what is in the gun safe. Means is 50/50 and motive is 100% brought with the crim. Easy to see why shooters get frustrated and angry when they are freely and readily associated with sociopaths and psychopaths. I'm all for gentlemanly conduct, but to date it hasn't netted much. Aussies are not a society that are known for niceties and subtlety either. Victimisation is what is happening plain and simple. I don't agree with the way the media has handled themselves. Certainly can't get any lower in my opinion. Society has lost its faith and trust and this is a symptom. Can't blame some folks for holding onto these anti gun feelings. They get their wounds picked at and reopened often enough. Time usually heals but not yet apparently and if we all wait long enough it may never.

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    1. Banned, are you insane? Of course not! But surely the 12g shotguns you cite are restricted to a 5 shot magazine capacity? Let me ask you a question. At a time when a National review is underway, in response to public outcry, specifically over the actions of Monis and his illicit 12g, do you think it was prudent to push the envelope with an increased magazine capacity on a 12g, regardless of the nature of the action involved? Or might it have been more prudent to either leave it a year 'til the heat was off, or maybe even suggest it was equipped with a 5 shot mag for the Australian scene to make a smoother entry and then just reload the thing occasionally?

      It may be my opinion alone, but setting ourselves up for all this scrutiny over 2 shells, just doesn't seem like a 'win' worthy of the drama in the press or for that matter, the possibility of prohibition should the press get clever in the way I fear they will.

      But what do I know. Happily I don't make the laws, I just worry about them.

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  13. This would have actually been our second well publicised sacrifice. And where did that get us?
    there a loads of redneck all noise and smoke gun owners who cant hit the side of a barn who poach and do the wrong thing. There is only one solution. Active club parcipation with peer approval. Its that simple.

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    1. Sorry, I'm not with you. What was our first well publicised sacrifice? You're talking voluntary and driven by us as I was in the article, yes?

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  14. The NFA was announced long before the Adler was on the radar, its just bought all this to a head. Notice the days and weeks after the siege at Martin Place everytime Abbott spoke he lied that Monis had a firearms licence, this would have been known 10 after Monis had been IDed. Make no mistake that this is all about one mans ego to have his John Howard moment, so he to can say like Howard that this was his "greatest achievement" while PM and "I took 750K killing machines off the streets" while PM.

    Sorry I totally disagree that we should give up the idea of having a perfectly legal firearm to appease the Antis and Gun Grabbers. Really what does the Adler do that the IAC, Chippa, Taylor doesnt? It holds one extra round (yes they hold 7 rounds, read the instruction manual, 5 in the mag, 1 in the chamber and 1 in the load ramp). If anything the Adler has bought this out in the open where we can fight it. We can not afford to give any ground on this, its death by 1000 cuts, incremental creep. They will just take little bit by little bit until we have nothing left to give and they have nothing left to take.

    Please tell my why we should give in or give up anything, have we done the wrong thing, did Monis or any other criminal get their firearms off a sporting shooter? One thing we have on our side is the truth and facts and restricting us sporting shooters and gun owners will do nothing to stop those with bad intensions and it will not make the public any safer!!!

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